ADHD
A casual community for people with ADHD
Values:
Acceptance, Openness, Understanding, Equality, Reciprocity.
Rules:
- No abusive, derogatory, or offensive post/comments.
- No porn, gore, spam, or advertisements allowed.
- Do not request for donations.
- Do not link to other social media or paywalled content.
- Do not gatekeep or diagnose.
- Mark NSFW content accordingly.
- No racism, homophobia, sexism, ableism, or ageism.
- Respectful venting, including dealing with oppressive neurotypical culture, is okay.
- Discussing other neurological problems like autism, anxiety, ptsd, and brain injury are allowed.
- Discussions regarding medication are allowed as long as you are describing your own situation and not telling others what to do (only qualified medical practitioners can prescribe medication).
Encouraged:
- Funny memes.
- Welcoming and accepting attitudes.
- Questions on confusing situations.
- Seeking and sharing support.
- Engagement in our values.
Relevant Lemmy communities:
lemmy.world/c/adhd will happily promote other ND communities as long as said communities demonstrate that they share our values.
I recently (a couple of years ago now) reached out to a psychiatrist because I was finding it increasingly difficult to cope. My responsibilities at work continue to expand and become more cerebral, requiring more time in front of the computer.
I made sure and told him of my childhood history of being diagnosed young and having to go to the nurse's office every day at lunch to get my afternoon pill and how that made me feel isolated and different. But that over time the pills helped me pull up my grades. Having been diagnosed as a child makes this process much easier as an adult.
The weird thing? He didn't ask for any records or proof of my childhood diagnosis. I really was on Ritalin from the second grade through high school and then Adderall in college. But he didn't ask for any cooborating evidence of that.
I guess you can take from that what you like. But they just don't seem to follow up on your childhood history of treatment.
I feel for people who weren't diagnosed as children and had to suffer with this without any assistance. It seems unfair that those people can't get help now, just because they weren't offered it in the past.
I don't want to constantly have to fight against my ADHD just so I can be average. Can you imagine any other disease getting this kind of treatment? "Yeah, you have cancer, but it's not killing you so just deal with it."
I guess they may have thought you were there only for the "legal speed".
I would just try another doctor... I would not take it personally... Albeit it sucks you had the experience 😕
Yeah when my doc asked me to talk about it I mentioned what a typical day was like for me.
I didn't hold back about it at all.
My thinking was basically it took me 8 months to schedule this thing and had to wait a further 3 for the appointment, I wasn't going to sugar coat it.
And I basically described how my morning was basically a never ending string of attempting to do various things to the point where my coffee was usually room temp by the time I drank it.
It probably didn't hurt that I had forgotten to shave the previous couple days.
I also talked her ear off for almost an hour and was unable to maintain specific topics on the main topic without a shit ton of detours.
I also mentioned that it felt like I had very little to no control of my life due to being unable to actually get things done that I started.
Basically the point I've flown right past is when going to a doc about something (anything really) it's best to be perfectly honest about what you're experiencing and to not mask at all.
Which is pretty frickin hard to do in my experience because of that wonderful little thing known as RSD. Rejection Sensitivity Dysphoria, a fairly common thing in people with ADHD.
I finally talked to my PCP about getting a diagnosis a few months ago, (I wasn't even thinking about medication, just taking to someone who could help guide me through this. I've thought I was neurotypical for almost 40 years!) and I got the same "Well, you seem to be doing well enough, so do you REALLY want to take a pill for the rest of your life?" Hey, asshole, I already take 3 pills everyday for BP and gout, you didn't hesitate to prescribe those. 🤦🏻♂️🤷🏻♂️
Have you considered the adhdonline.com route? I was pointed that direction to get a on assessment as it was faster and less expensive. Assessments could have taken 3+ months and cost several thousand dollars. The online assessment cost $180 and I completed it in a few hours on a Friday afternoon. I had a diagnosis of ADHD (other) by midday the following Tuesday. I started on medication that Thursday.
Did they charge you for the assessment and the initial consultation? If I'm reading this correctly they charged me $179 for the assessment and it's another $199 for the initial consultation?
So my process was a bit out of order, but yes I was billed for a consultation as well as the assessment. I think after insurance my scenario was similar to yours. The Psychiatrist who I saw prior to my assessment (PCP referred me one step too far) suggested the online route as it would take 3 to 6 months to be assessed through conventional channels. I was also told it could cost as much as $3000 to $4000 for the assessment alone.
I figured that I didn't have much to lose. With the Psychiatrist themselves telling me that the diagnosis given through the online service was an actionable diagnosis, then why not give it a try. Seems that the site employs a team or teams of credentialed and certified psychiatrists to report on the questionnaires.
Seems that the change in accepting a diagnosis from ADHDonline.com is a new thing as of this year or last.
Urgh that suuucks! I speak from personal experience as well. "Oh you did well in school and even had a learning group? Sorry you can't have ADHD. NEXT!"
I was so disappointed that all the effort of actual getting an apointmemt basically went to shit. Haven't done anything since then but I know I should keep looking.
Guess it depends on the doctor. I went in and said I had adhd and they looked at my body language and diagnosed me on the spot lol
I feel you and that's frustrating.
I went back recently as an adult over 30 and was basically told the same thing. What's frustrating to me is that I was diagnosed as a teenager. I was on Ritalin, Adderall, Straterra, and more. There is documentation. But my parents lost it all so it's like it never happened. What's even more frustrating is that I'm going to the same exact doctors office as when I was a teenager, but they don't have those records anymore. Apparently they purge records after 15 years. So basically they have to start with me as an undiagnosed adult, which they don't really do.
They said the same things to me, I have a good job, house, relationship, and all that, so I must not be doing too bad. But what bothers me is the level I feel I should be operating at compared to how I'm actually functioning. When I was in the military there was enough structure for me to function decently. Now that I'm out and higher up in my workplace with less supervision/accountability/structure, I find myself struggling more with my ADHD symptoms. But no medical professionals seem to care so I guess I'll just keep self medicating....
omg, I am terrified of this happening to me. I have been looking for a specialist since March. It's so fucking hard to trust someone when most people are pretty much ignorant of ADHD.
Gosh, sorry to hear that. I'm also "functional", but I'm that duck paddling madly underwater to get anywhere.
I thought my psychiatrist was also going to say I'm normal because my parents insisted I was when I gave them the childhood ADHD assessment form.
I read a few questions to my mother because she didn't want to read it herself, and stopped at about 5 before giving it to my dad to fill out. The final question being: "Does your child have trouble completing schoolwork or household tasks?"
Her answer: (on a scale of 1 to 5, 1 being normal and 5 being very bad ADHD) 1, you didn't have trouble, you're just lazy.
All my life, hearing "you have potential, but you're just lazy", or "I didn't see you dozing off playing games". No, I'm not lazy, and yes, I have fallen asleep gaming, multiple times.
I hope you'll be able to find that diagnosis or at least proper support for your struggles. Just because we function, doesn't mean we can't function even better with help and medication.
Also still undiagnosed here, and that's exactly the scenario I dread. It also doesn't help that the only frigging doc in the area allowed to / able to make that diagnosis keeps telling me that they don't have any capacity for new patients "at the moment" and that I should "call again a month or so later" as if those dang calls didn't drain me completely for weeks in advance.
And to be perfectly honest, I find it somewhat sick how some of these psychiatrists think that their job is not to help their patients cope better, but instead to make sure that their patients don't make other people uncomfortable, as if silencing the symptoms would make the core issue go away.
I wish you the best of luck and hope you'll find an actually professional psychatrist soon.
A few years back when I first started thinking I had AuDHD I spent a small fortune on a psychologist, only to be blown off ... because she was more focused on the chance I might have early-onset dementia (because my working memory is awful). Seems my decades of masking worked too well and she made up her mind without looking further.
Finally about 6 months ago I was diagnosed. ADHD meds would help for a few days, then side effects would negate the help. I finally just stopped taking them.